TY - JOUR AU - Card,David AU - Lemieux,Thomas TI - Dropout and Enrollment Trends in the Post-War Period: What Went Wrong in the 1970s? JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 7658 PY - 2000 Y2 - April 2000 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w7658 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w7658.pdf N1 - Author contact info: David Card Department of Economics 549 Evans Hall, #3880 University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, CA 94720-3880 Tel: 510/642-5222 Fax: 510/643-7042 E-Mail: card@econ.berkeley.edu Thomas Lemieux Department of Economics University of British Columbia #997-1873 East Mall Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z1 CANADA Tel: 604/822-2092 Fax: 604/822-5915 E-Mail: thomas.lemieux@ubc.ca M1 - published as David Card, Thomas Lemieux. "Dropout and Enrollment Trends in the Postwar Period: What Went Wrong in the 1970s?," in Jonathan Gruber, editor, "Risky Behavior among Youths: An Economic Analysis" University of Chicago Press (2001) AB - Over most of the 20th century successive generations of U.S. children had higher enrollment rates and rising levels of completed education. This trend reversed with the baby boom cohorts who attended school in the 1970s, and only resumed in the mid-1980s. Even today, the college entry rate of male high school seniors is not much higher than it was in 1968. In this paper, we use a variety of data sources to address the question What went wrong in the 1970s?' We focus on both demand-side factors and on a particular supply-side variable the relative size of the cohort currently in school. We find that tuition costs and local unemployment rates affect schooling decisions, although neither variable explains recent trends in enrollment or completed education. We also find that larger cohorts have lower schooling attainment, and that aggregate enrollment rates are correlated with changes in the earnings gains associated with a college degree. For women, our results suggest that the slowdown in education in the 1970s was a temporary response to large cohort sizes and low returns to education. For men, however, the decline in enrollment rates in the 1970s and slow recovery in the 1980s point to a permanent shift in the inter-cohort trend in educational attainment that will affect U.S. economic growth and trends in inequality for many decades to come. ER -